Whit
Member
As the title infers, I'm an old guy…how I got this old this quick is puzzling! As a young police officer I spent the majority of my time toting an S&W revolver on my Sam Brown belt. That means that I, and guys like me, have considerable trigger time with a DA revolver. Based on that experience, I have reached a conclusion about conversions to semi autos by long in the tooth revolver shooters. I reserve the right to be absolutely wrong…I certainly have been before.
My convoluted logic has determined that moving from the revolver to the DA/SA semi auto makes sense. The former revolver shooter has only one thing to learn, the decocker. We are very familiar with the long pull of the double action shot which is much the same whether performed with a round gun or a bottom feeder. The same with the single action shot, single action is single action. So the DA/SA is very similar to shooting a revolver with regard to the actual firing. It is just the shoving it back in the sheath on the belt that is different. Decock dummy should be easy, even for an old guy to learn.
Many of us would conclude that that long DA pull, in either a revolver or DA/SA pistol, is a deterrent to an AD. Plus some of use just like having a hammer. We also might like the fact that we can reload more rapidly with the DA/SA semi auto that our old 6 shooters, while maintaining the same fire control mechanism.
Certainly there are many of us senior shooters who can be retrained to the "modern" striker fired handguns. But some us are just comfortable with the DA/SA action. Kind of like what legendary football coach Darrel Royal was fond of saying, "dance with what brung ya". So does it make sense for old time revolver shooters to transition to the DA/SA semi auto…some of us think so. No disrespect meant to the fabled Col. Cooper, but I respectfully disagree with his conclusion that the action he termed as "crunch, tick" is not a "solution looking for a problem", but rather a viable, easy transition for a confirmed old revolver shooter.
Which DA/SA is best…the one you like and shoot the best. There is probably not ten cents worth of difference between any of the quality DA/SA semi autos on the market. Kind of like arguing which is better, Ford or Chevrolet…it is a personal decision. So, pick a Sig, Beretta, CZ or Gen 3 S&W, or whatever fits your mitts, and enjoy shooting almost like you did back in the day.
As always, I reserve the right to be wrong and am more often than not. But hopefully I am at least partially correct this time around. After all, it was a difficult transition from call boxes to radios and hand cranked sirens to electronic squealers! Blessings to all.
My convoluted logic has determined that moving from the revolver to the DA/SA semi auto makes sense. The former revolver shooter has only one thing to learn, the decocker. We are very familiar with the long pull of the double action shot which is much the same whether performed with a round gun or a bottom feeder. The same with the single action shot, single action is single action. So the DA/SA is very similar to shooting a revolver with regard to the actual firing. It is just the shoving it back in the sheath on the belt that is different. Decock dummy should be easy, even for an old guy to learn.
Many of us would conclude that that long DA pull, in either a revolver or DA/SA pistol, is a deterrent to an AD. Plus some of use just like having a hammer. We also might like the fact that we can reload more rapidly with the DA/SA semi auto that our old 6 shooters, while maintaining the same fire control mechanism.
Certainly there are many of us senior shooters who can be retrained to the "modern" striker fired handguns. But some us are just comfortable with the DA/SA action. Kind of like what legendary football coach Darrel Royal was fond of saying, "dance with what brung ya". So does it make sense for old time revolver shooters to transition to the DA/SA semi auto…some of us think so. No disrespect meant to the fabled Col. Cooper, but I respectfully disagree with his conclusion that the action he termed as "crunch, tick" is not a "solution looking for a problem", but rather a viable, easy transition for a confirmed old revolver shooter.
Which DA/SA is best…the one you like and shoot the best. There is probably not ten cents worth of difference between any of the quality DA/SA semi autos on the market. Kind of like arguing which is better, Ford or Chevrolet…it is a personal decision. So, pick a Sig, Beretta, CZ or Gen 3 S&W, or whatever fits your mitts, and enjoy shooting almost like you did back in the day.
As always, I reserve the right to be wrong and am more often than not. But hopefully I am at least partially correct this time around. After all, it was a difficult transition from call boxes to radios and hand cranked sirens to electronic squealers! Blessings to all.